from OurFuture.org:
New Unemployment, Old SolutionsBy Eric Lotke
November 6, 2009 - 12:09pm ET
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Today’s unemployment data contain gloomy news. Gloomy, but expected. The interpretation of the data is even worse.
First, the data. Unemployment rose to 10.2 percent last month, breaking the double digit barrier. Most people expected it to happen, though the job loss (190,000) was a bit worse than most economic forecasts (175,000). We can maybe be happy that the October job loss wasn’t as high as September (263,000), but this modest deceleration doesn’t mean much to the 15.7 million people without work, the 9.3 million people working part-time but looking for full-time, or the 3.2 million people who are discouraged or marginally attached to the work force and barely even looking anymore. Nearly 20 percent of the workforce isn’t where it wants to be.
In other words, it’s bad. You don’t need me or the Bureau of Labor Statistics to tell you that.
The interesting part is where it’s bad and what to do about it.
The biggest job losses in October were in construction (62,000) and manufacturing (61,000). In the last year, these sectors have lost over 2.5 million jobs between them. Job losses in these sectors hurt worse than most other sectors. Manufacturing jobs have a bigger economic “multiplier” than other sectors, creating more jobs and more economic activity around them. Manufacturing creates jobs “downstream,” as production workers buy sandwiches from restaurants; and “upstream,” as steelworkers and coal miners work to provide raw material. The benefits of construction obviously count for more and last longer than just the construction itself. Anybody who doesn't live in a cave knows that. ..........(more)
The complete piece is at:
http://www.ourfuture.org/blog-entry/2009114506/new-unemployment-old-solutions